Meanwhile, the 24-year-old continues to fight for her life in a Twin Cities hospital, with "full thickness burns" covering most of her body, meaning both layers of her skin have been destroyed. Family members say she has dozens of surgeries ahead.

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Friends have set up a GoFundMe page to help Arnold pay for her medical expenses; it has so far earned more than double its $10,000 fundraising goal.

According to WDIO, police say they won't be releasing any more information about Arnold out of respect for her family.

Some firefighters will stay at the site of the "Jeep Fire" to monitor hot spots. Authorities chose a nickname for the blaze to reflect their belief that it was started by a vehicle. The fire burned mostly grassland and forest but a few buildings were lost, including one home.

Patricia Pauna, 72, was air-lifted to a hospital in Duluth after she received severe burns to her arms and legs when when she tried to put a grass fire with a shovel in rural Itasca County, the Duluth News Tribune reports. The fire had started in a pit and spread to nearby tall grasses. Local fire crews and the Minnesota Department of Natural Resources put it out.